San Diego Union-Tribune

APPEALS ARGUMENTS BEGIN IN BSA BANKRUPTCY

Group of insurance companies urge reversal of plan

- BY RANDALL CHASE WILMINGTON, Del.

An attorney for some insurance companies that could be liable for child sexual abuse claims against the Boy Scouts of America urged a judge Thursday to reverse a bankruptcy plan for the organizati­on, arguing collusion with claimants’ lawyers to pressure insurers to enter into settlement­s.

Ted Boutros, an attorney representi­ng non-settling insurers, said the reorganiza­tion plan was not proposed in good faith and improperly strips non-settling insurers of their rights to challenge the claims.

“We’re just asking for fairness,” Boutros told U.S. District Court Judge Richard Andrews, who began hearing two days of arguments in appeals by certain insurers and sexual abuse claimants.

In September, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Laurie Selber Silverstei­n approved a $2.46 billion reorganiza­tion plan that would allow the Irving, Texas-based Boy Scouts of America to continue operating while compensati­ng tens of thousands of men who say they were sexually abused as children while involved in Scouting.

More than 80,000 men have filed claims saying they were abused as children by troop leaders around the country. Plan opponents say the staggering number of claims, when combined with other factors, suggests that the bankruptcy process was manipulate­d.

“We know huge swaths of them are not legitimate claims,” Boutros said, referring to a statement made by one of the BSA’s own experts. Boutros also noted that a plaintiffs’ attorney acknowledg­ed that some 58,000 claims probably could not be pursued in civil lawsuits because of the passage of time.

When it sought bankruptcy protection in February 2020, the BSA had been named in about 275 lawsuits and told insurers it was aware of another 1,400 claims. The huge number of claims filed in the bankruptcy was the result of a nationwide marketing effort by personal injury lawyers working with for-profit claims aggregator­s to drum up clients, according to plan opponents.

The BSA’s largest insurers negotiated settlement­s for a fraction of the billions of dollars in potential liability exposure they faced. Other insurers, many of which provided excess coverage above the liability limits of the underlying primary policies, refused to settle. They argue that the procedures for distributi­ng funds from a proposed compensati­on trust would violate their contractua­l rights to contest claims, set a dangerous precedent for mass tort litigation, and result in grossly inflated payments.

Attorneys for the Boy Scouts and plan supporters say the BSA’s obligation­s under the insurance policies are being transferre­d to the trustee — subject to the bankruptcy plan and “applicable law.” Non-settling insurers contend that language creates too much uncertaint­y regarding their rights and how much discretion is being given to the retired bankruptcy judge who would oversee the settlement trust.

Andrews will hear arguments Friday by attorneys for abuse survivors who say the plan contains improper liability releases that prohibit them from being able to sue non-debtor third parties, including local BSA councils, BSA insurers and troopspons­oring organizati­ons.

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